The President's Daily Brief - February 10th, 2026: Second Wave Of Protests Builds In Iran & Israel Signals Unilateral Action
Episode Date: February 10, 2026In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: First up—public anger is flaring again across Iran, and this time the warning signs aren’t just on the streets, but inside the regime itself, a...s unrest spreads across society and signs emerge that Iran’s leadership may be preparing for instability. Later in the show—as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu prepares to meet with President Trump, new reports suggest Israel has warned Washington it may act alone if Iran crosses a ballistic missile red line. Plus—Russia’s foreign minister accuses the White House of backing out of alleged agreements tied to Ukraine, taking aim at President Trump and accusing him of so-called “Bidenism.” And in today’s Back of the Brief—a chilling reminder of Beijing’s tightening grip on Hong Kong, as media tycoon and democracy advocate Jimmy Lai is sentenced to twenty years in prison. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting https://PDBPremium.com. Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President's Daily Brief. YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief Ethos Life Insurance: Protect your family’s future with fast, online life insurance from Ethos—get your free quote in minutes at https://Ethos.com/PDB CBDistillery: Visit https://CBDistillery.com and use promo code PDB for 25% off your entire order! QUO: Make this the year where no opportunity slips away. Try QUO for free PLUS get 20% off your first 6 months when you go to https://Quo.com/PDB Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Tuesday, the 10th of February. Welcome to the President's Daily Brief. I'm Mike Baker,
your eyes and ears on the world stage. All right, let's get briefed. First up, public anger is once again
flaring up across Iran, and this time the anger isn't just on the streets, but inside the regime itself.
I'll have the details. Later in the show, as Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu prepares to meet with
President Trump, new reports suggest Israel has warned Washington,
it may act alone if Iran crosses a ballistic missile red line.
Plus, Russia's foreign minister is accusing the White House of backing out of alleged agreements tied to Ukraine,
accusing Trump of, quote, Bidenism.
Now, I don't know this for sure, but I suspect that President Trump won't find it charming
that Putin and his minions are comparing him to former President Biden.
That's just a guess.
And in today's back of the brief, a chilling reminder of China's grip on Hong Kong.
as media tycoon and democracy advocate Jimmy Lai receives a 20-year prison sentence.
But first, today's PDB spotlight.
A second wave of public unrest appears to be building inside Iran,
and this one looks different from what we saw just weeks ago.
According to new reporting from the Wall Street Journal,
Iran is now seeing a broader, more deeply rooted surge of anger
following last month's mass killings of protesters.
What began as street demonstrations has evolved into the war.
something far more persistent and far more dangerous for the regime, a society-wide rejection
that's showing up in schools, hospitals, universities, unions, and even at funerals.
Morning families are chanting anti-regime slogans over the graves of those killed by security
forces. University students are holding memorials for classmates who died during the crackdown
and refusing to stay silent. Medical students are staging sit-ins to protest the arrest of doctors
who treated injured demonstrators.
Teachers' unions are issuing public statements condemning the violence.
High school students are quietly refusing to sing the national anthem.
It has the appearance of what could become sustained defiance, and, importantly, the rhetoric has changed.
Iranians are no longer calling for reform or accountability.
They're openly calling for the fall of Supreme Leader Ali Khomein.
Former Prime Minister Miu-Hossain Masavi, long under house arrest and once considered a reformist,
has now said the Islamic Republic has been.
reform and must be replaced altogether.
Musavi said, quote, when you were wearing the uniform of war against your own people,
you were striking your own roots with an axe, end quote.
Civil society activists have published open letters, blaming Chamini personally for what
they describe as crimes against humanity.
A well-known Iranian actress is announced she'll no longer perform, saying she refuses to work
in a country that, quote, smells of blood.
Now, as you can imagine, the regime's response to the ongoing unrest has been
brutal and expansive.
Security forces are carrying out waves of arrests, not just at protests, but afterward,
detaining people in their homes, at memorial services, and even inside hospitals.
Armed men in plain clothes have reportedly raided medical centers, dragging away injured
protesters seeking treatment.
Doctors and nurses accused of helping demonstrators have been beaten and detained.
Teachers have warned students to stay home, if they show visible injuries,
and to wipe their phones of anything political before inspections.
Independent rights groups estimate that roughly 7,000 people have been killed since demonstrations began in late December,
with more than 50,000, that's 50,000 arrested.
Iranian authorities say the numbers are far lower.
Oh, labeling the dead as rioters or terrorists.
Well, I'm sure the Iranian regime wouldn't lie about something like that.
One woman interviewed by the journal summed it up by saying that people are terrified but also filled with hatred.
She said many Iranians are willing to die themselves if it means.
their children won't have to live under the same system. So that's the mood on the street.
What about the mood in the halls of power? Well, that brings us to something new, evidence that
those in charge may believe this wave of public anger is far from over. That evidence comes from
Treasury Secretary Scott Besant. Testifying before the Senate Banking Committee,
Besant described what he says is a growing sense of panic among Iran's leadership, driven by economic
collapse and sustained U.S. sanctions. According to Besant, the Trump administration's maximum
pressure campaign has created a severe dollar shortage inside Iran, putting enormous strain on the
financial system. But even more importantly, Besson told senators that Iranian leaders are currently
wiring money out of the country, quote, like crazy, adding, quote, rats are leaving the ship,
and arguing that capital flight on that scale suggests that those at the top believe the regime
itself may be in danger. If Besson's account is accurate, it doesn't mean that the Islamic Republic
is about to collapse tomorrow. As we've repeatedly seen, authoritarian systems can absorb enormous pressure
before they finally break. But it is a strong indication that those in power still believe the threat
to their grip on power is very real. When unrest spreads beyond the streets and into the fabric of everyday life,
schools, hospitals, unions, and when the people running the system start moving their money offshore,
it tells you something important. Members of the government, with the wherewithal, may be looking for the exit door.
Coming up next, Israel warns that it may act unilaterally if Iran crosses a ballistic missile red line.
And Moscow accuses President Trump of backing away from alleged Ukraine agreements.
I'll be right back.
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As U.S. Iran talks stall and Tehran escalates threats against American military targets in the Middle East,
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu heads to Washington Wednesday to meet with President Trump,
as Israel pushes for a tougher approach to the Iranian regime.
What Israel is signaling ahead of this meeting is fairly direct.
Netanyahu's team is making it clear that they don't see the current American negotiation strategy with Iran as anywhere close to sufficient.
From Jerusalem's perspective, and it's one that Trump administration,
is consistently shared, a deal that focuses only on uranium levels leaves the real threat intact.
Iran's missile program keeps advancing, its proxy networks keep operating, and none of that is
addressed if negotiations remain confined to the nuclear negotiations. Thus far, Tehran has only been willing
to engage on its nuclear program, drawing a hard line against any discussion of missiles or regional
activity. Now, it's just speculation, but there may be a couple of key factors.
at play here. One, the Iranian regime may be feeling like it can drive this negotiation train
because they got away with murder during the protests. Well, okay, thousands of murders. The fact that
there was no meaningful response from the international community may be emboldening the leaders of
Iran. The other factor may be that the White House could be so keen to secure a nuclear deal,
despite past deals being somewhere between useless and pretty much useless, that they're willing
to let Iran dictate terms for negotiations and willing to look at it.
the other way as the regime continues to crack down on dissent and internally. As we previously discussed,
the U.S. and Iran met indirectly in Oman last week, and Trump described those talks as, quote,
very good. That, of course, was not a declaration of success, but a signal that sustained American
pressure may be at least getting Iran to the negotiating table. However, the Iranian leadership
refuted Trump's positive description of the talks, literally calling him a liar. The reality is,
once the talks got underway, negotiators quickly ran into the same roadblocks that stalled diplomacy before.
Iran's unwillingness to negotiate on its missile program and its proxy networks.
The Trump administration, of course, has paired diplomacy with sustained and expanded military pressure,
repeatedly warning that force remains an option if Iran refuses to reach a comprehensive deal on its red lines.
But that posture has rattled regional capitals.
Gulf Arab states warned that any strike in Iran could ignite a broader conflict,
with memories still fresh from the 12-day Israel-Iran war last June.
But from Washington's standpoint, easing pressure without securing meaningful concessions
would leave the Mullahs freer to advance the regime's capabilities
and probably leave them with the belief that the U.S. doesn't really have any red lines.
Iran's messaging, since the talks only reinforce how wide the gap remains.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abasaraji warned that if the U.S. attacks Iran,
Tehran lacks the ability to strike the American homeland
and would instead retaliate against U.S. military bases across the region.
Crucially, Aragia has since reiterated that Iran's ballistic missile program is, quote,
in no way negotiable.
Now, that position collides directly with U.S. and Israeli demands.
Secretary of State Mark Arubio says that any viable agreement must include limits on missiles
and Iran's regional activities.
That's the message Netanyahu is bringing to the White House.
No narrow nuclear deal, no easing of pressure, and no constraints on.
on Israel's ability to act militarily if Iran crosses red lines with its continued production
and stockpiling of ballistic missiles.
So where does that leave things?
Well, if you think it sounds like a bit of a chaotic, jumbled mess, you wouldn't be far off.
Officials say Israel has outlined operational scenarios to degrade Iran's missile production
and infrastructure should American diplomacy fail and U.S. military pressure remains for show only.
All right, I want to turn now to an accusation that Moscow
is leveling at the White House.
Russia's foreign minister claims the U.S. backed out of alleged agreements on Ukraine,
and he's directing that charge at President Trump,
accusing the administration of slipping back into what he calls Bidenism.
And by the way, the Kremlin accusing another government of not honoring agreements
is, well, humorous at best.
Here's how Russia wants to set the frame.
Speaking to the Russian-registered outlet TV Bricks,
the foreign minister Sergei Lavrov claims the U.S. made an offer during talks, he says,
took place in Anchorage in 2025.
According to Lavrov, that alleged proposal would have ended the war by having Ukraine cede
the entire Donbass region to Russia without further fighting.
He put it bluntly, Lavrov says the U.S. made the offer.
Russia agreed, and the problem should have been resolved.
Only now, Washington is supposedly backing away, according to Lavrov.
From there, Lavrov widened the argument.
He says Russia's acceptance of those terms should have unlocked broader cooperation with
Washington.
Instead, he claims the opposite occurred. Sanctions remained in place, pressure mounted on Russian energy exports,
and Western governments moved against Moscow's shadow fleet. But I want to point out there's just one
problem with Lavrov's narrative. The White House never confirmed any such agreement ever existed.
Despite that news from the Trump administration, Lavrov pressed the point by citing American sanctions,
many of which originated under the Biden administration. He criticized the continued freezing of Russian
gold and foreign exchange reserves and singled out newer sanctions imposed under Trump
against Russia's largest oil producers. And this is where Lavrov introduces the label
Bidenism. In Moscow's telling, Bidenism isn't about diplomacy. It's about sanctions that keep biting
after promises of alleviating that pressure. Its energy revenues being squeezed in Russia's war
economy increasingly under strain. From Lavrov's perspective, Trump was supposed to abandon
the Biden playbook, not continuate. I'm sorry, Sergei. Lavroov's,
even argued that those sanctions came weeks after what he described as a, quote,
very good meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin,
portraying the economic pressure as proof that Washington's approach hasn't really changed.
Lavrov also condemned Western efforts to disrupt Russia's oil shipments,
accusing the U.S. and its partners of waging what he calls a, quote,
war against tankers on the high seas.
I don't know where that fits on the ladder of unacceptable activities.
Maybe it's below invading a sovereign nation?
I don't know.
He singled out American pressure on India and other buyers to stop purchasing discounted Russian oil,
a move that directly targets one of the Kremlin's most important sources of revenue.
That pressure matters because, as we've discussed here on the PDB,
Russia's war economy is obviously deeply dependent on oil and gas exports.
Inflation is high.
Interest rates are elevated and Moscow has fewer options than ever before.
Trump has made no secret of using tariffs and secondary sanctions to squeeze that revenue stream,
including tariffs on India for its purchases of Russian oil.
Pressure that Trump said would push New Delhi to shift to importing U.S.-controlled Venezuelan oil instead.
Now, all this circles back to the real sticking point in Ukraine-Russia ceasefire talks,
and that would be, of course, territory, specifically the Donbass.
Russia has long demanded that Ukrainian forces withdrawal from the eastern region
and has increasingly tied any future peace deal to Kyiv surrendering complete control.
Ukraine has rejected that demand, though officials say alternative agreements, such as the demilitarized zone, could be discussed.
As it stands, Kiev still controls approximately one-fifth of the Donbass.
A U.S. source familiar with the talks told the Keeve Independent that Washington is not forcing any territorial concessions on Ukraine,
emphasizing that any peace deal must be agreed to by both Kiv and Moscow.
And that's where talks remain stuck.
Trilateral talks among Russia, Ukraine, and the U.S. could resume this week, with the Trump administration combining economic incentives and financial pressures in a continuing effort to move Moscow toward a settlement.
All right. Coming up in today's back of the brief, media tycoon Jimmy Lai is handed what amounts to a death sentence as Beijing tightens its kung-foo-like grip on Hong Kong.
More on that when we come back.
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In today's back of the brief, media tycoon and democracy advocate Jimmy Lai has been
sentenced to 20 years in prison in Hong Kong, a punishment widely viewed as politically motivated
and given his age, effectively a life, or perhaps better to put it, a death sentence.
Now, if you're not familiar with Jimmy Lai, he was the founder of Apple Daily.
That was once Hong Kong's most outspoken pro-democracy newspaper, and he was a frequent
critic of the Chinese Communist Party.
His conviction falls under Beijing's sweeping national security law imposed on Hong Kong back in 2020.
Lai was found guilty of charges, including colluding with foreign forces and publishing what
authorities labeled seditious material, charges that stemmed direct.
directly from his journalism, his political views, and his support for Hong Kong's protest movement.
Lai has been behind bars since late 2020, much of that time in solitary confinement,
while Beijing systematically dismantled his media empire.
Apple Daily was shuttered, its assets frozen, its journalists arrested or forced into exile.
What once stood as a symbol of Hong Kong's free press was erased almost overnight.
In reality, though this case is about far more than one man.
For decades, Hong Kong was promised a high degree of autonomy under the one-country two system framework.
Beijing pledged that the city's freedoms, speech, press, assembly, and an independent judiciary
would remain intact for 50 years after the handover that took place in 1997.
That promise is, of course, broken.
Jimmy Lai's sentence confirms what has been clear for years.
Dissent in Hong Kong is no longer tolerated.
Journalism, critical of the state, is treated as a crime, and loyalty to the country.
Communist Party is the only acceptable political position. Courts now operate within the boundaries
set by Beijing, not by the rule of law that Hong Kong once prided itself on. The message to the
rest of the city is unmistakable. If one of Hong Kong's most prominent figures with international
recognition and global attention can be silenced and imprisoned, then anyone is fair game. And the implications
stretch far beyond Hong Kong. This is the future that Taiwan believes it will have if it's ever
forced back under Beijing's control. Hong Kong was once held up by Chinese officials as a model,
proof that reunification could coexist with freedom. Instead, it has become a warning. Autonomy in
Beijing's hands is temporary. Promises are empty, and dissent is always, eventually, crushed.
And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Tuesday, the 10th of February. Now, if you
have any questions or comments, and I hope you do, please reach out to me at BDB at thefirsttv.com.
And of course, the entire PDB staff would be most grateful if you'd take a minute to check out our YouTube channel.
That, not surprisingly, is on YouTube.
Just search up at President's Daily Brief.
If you like what you see, and hopefully you will, please hit that subscribe button.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back later today with the PDB afternoon bulletin.
Until then, stay informed.
Stay safe.
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